Wed, Jan 14, 2026 | Rajab 25, 1447 | Fajr 05:45 | DXB
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Following a transitional period for digital assets, the focus shifts toward institutional stability, regulatory clarity, and long-term portfolio strategies
For many people, 2025 felt like a year the crypto market should have soared and didn’t. Markets lagged, prices disappointed and we started to rethink once sacred rhythms like the four year cycle. Some analysts suggested a 5.4 year pattern (with hope for a final run at the bull market after all), while others argued cycles might be replaced altogether by a market shaped more by institutions than solo traders. At the same time, by the end of the year my social media feeds were filled with people talking about how 2025 was the year of the snake in Chinese zodiac, and that in February, we pass into the year of the Fire Horse. So what if 2025 was an important transition year, where crypto shed its Wild West reputation like a snake sheds its skin, in the direction of structural maturity and widespread adoption, under the auspices of the Fire Horse’s energy, enthusiasm and speed? Either way, markets are up despite geopolitical uncertainty, an interesting development, considering the impact of incidents in the past. And 2026 is shaping up to be very interesting indeed. Here are six things I’m looking forward to:
1) Crypto goes mainstream
For a long time, the biggest financial voices made a person feel like they were crazy if they invested in this space. Summing up the mainstream investment world’s skepticism, in 2018 Warren Buffett memorably dismissed Bitcoin as “rat poison”. Yet just three years later, Berkshire Hathaway had invested in Nu Holdings Ltd., a fintech company that operates Brazil’s Nubank and offers crypto services, and later added to their holdings. While Berkshire has since divested, the entire situation is symbolic of a moving trend towards legacy finance shifting from mocking to holding digital or digital-related assets, and increasingly, of integrating them into core offerings. For example, industry leader Blackrock is now one of the largest institutional holders of Bitcoin, advising clients hold at least two percent of their portfolios. Most of the big institutions are advising the same, and offering their clients an assortment of venues. Now big audit and advisory firms are aggressively leaning into crypto services too, building practices to serve digital asset clients because institutional demand has finally crossed a threshold. Whether you like it or not, whether you see it or not, everywhere I look crypto is here to stay.
2) More regulatory clarity
One of the biggest narratives heading into 2026 is regulatory structure — not just debate. In the US, the GENIUS Act was signed into law in mid 2025, setting strong backing and transparency requirements for stablecoins and laying groundwork for federal oversight of tokenized money. The Clarity Act, which aims to set a statutory regulatory framework that more clearly defines which regulators oversee various digital assets is expected in the first half of 2026.
Around the world and here in the UAE financial authorities in hubs like the Dubai International Financial Centre and Abu Dhabi Global Market are issuing clear rules for token and exchange licensing, giving founders and funds predictable pathways to operate within structured frameworks. These developments set the stage for 2026 to be about implementation, not just legislation.
3) Long-term crypto portfolios
When I began this journey in earnest in early 2023, my plan was simple: take profits, exit at the top and walk away before the downturn towards more traditional investments. But the bull market blow off top never arrived — and that’s because crypto isn’t behaving like it once did.
Today, I’m not thinking about when to sell everything. I’m thinking about what kind of portfolio I want over the next three to five years, and about what core holdings deserve a place in it.
Increasingly, I hear the same refrain from sophisticated allocators: wealthy investors don’t cash out their assets into cash — they redeploy them into other appreciating assets. That’s a big shift from the speculative, trader first mindset of earlier cycles.
For me, that means holding foundational assets like Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP, while reconsidering how and when to trim smaller cap, higher risk tokens.
4) Getting crypto to work
Owning crypto isn’t just about price appreciation anymore — it’s about deploying it in ways that generate return.
Products like Bitcoin backed loans from platforms such as Ledn let you borrow USD against Bitcoin, unlocking liquidity without selling. Stablecoin staking with platforms like Camino offer yield on assets that would otherwise sit idle.
This is a huge shift for me personally — moving from avoiding debt to using it for growth — and it reflects the broader evolution of the crypto ecosystem from speculation to financial infrastructure.
5) Easier exposure
One of the biggest usability breakthroughs quietly emerging is simplified diversified exposure — especially through crypto index products.
Crypto ETFs have expanded beyond Bitcoin and Ether to include funds holding Solana, XRP, Litecoin and more. That matters because ETFs give investors regulated, tax efficient exposure without administrative headaches, custodial risk or error. New index and multi-coin funds will continue to make crypto more approachable, taking the guesswork out of investing for newbies, too.
6) Spreading crypto curiosity
In the past two months alone, two people outside the space have asked me about investing in Bitcoin and XRP. After years where I enthused and others rolled their eyes, I call this progress — and evidence that curiosity is moving beyond the crypto echo chamber. While it all remains overwhelming to enter, if I had to do it all over again, I’d stick to getting an exchange account and buying a little of some top projects every week, learning along with way.
Do you have a question or a tip or a topic you’d like covered? Reach out at
cryptochroniclescoverage@gmail.com.
Ann Marie McQueen is a long-time Abu Dhabi resident, Canadian journalist and founder of Hotflash inc, a global media platform providing expert information for women in midlife.